O'Neil v. State

296 N.W. 96, 237 Wis. 391, 135 A.L.R. 719, 1941 Wisc. LEXIS 211
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 10, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 296 N.W. 96 (O'Neil v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Neil v. State, 296 N.W. 96, 237 Wis. 391, 135 A.L.R. 719, 1941 Wisc. LEXIS 211 (Wis. 1941).

Opinions

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 393 The plaintiffs in error, Frank L. O'Neil and Eugene Klink, were brought to trial on an information charging each of them with violating sec. 340.45, Stats., by maliciously threatening to prosecute Clara Lehman on a charge of criminal libel with the intent thereby to extort $1,400 from her. The jury found both defendants guilty of the charge alleged, and the court entered judgments approving the convictions and imposing a fine of $500 on Klink and $100 on O'Neil, with costs, and jail sentences in case of default. Each defendant petitioned for a writ of error. *Page 394 The following opinion was filed February 4, 1941: The principal assignments of error relied upon by the plaintiffs in error, Frank L. O'Neil and Eugene Klink (hereinafter called "defendants"), are that the court erred in denying their motions to direct verdicts acquitting and discharging them at the close of the trial, and to set aside the verdicts of conviction and order their discharge or, in the alternative, grant a new trial. In support of these assignments of error it is the defendants' contention that neither of them made any threat of a criminal prosecution and that O'Neil did not demand or want the payment of any money; that the testimony to the contrary by Clara Lehman and her husband, Henry Lehman, is so contradictory and incredible as to be unworthy of belief; and that each of the defendants was entitled to a directed verdict because the evidence shows conclusively that he was not guilty of extortion under sec. 340.45, Stats.

Although there are many conflicts in other respects in the testimony, the following matters were established beyond dispute. Clara Lehman and her husband, Henry Lehman, resided on premises adjoining the residence in which O'Neil and his wife resided in the city of Juneau. In February, 1938, Clara Lehman sent an anonymous letter to Nicholas Klink, the superintendent of the Dodge county asylum and home, *Page 395 and the father of the defendant Eugene Klink, who managed the Dodge county farm under his father's supervision. In the letter there were statements which could be construed to charge that property belonging to the county had been misappropriated by or with the knowledge of Eugene Klink and that O'Neil had been somewhat benefited thereby. As the trial court considered these statements libelous per se as against Klink and O'Neil, the state was not permitted to introduce proof to show the truth thereof; and as these rulings were in accord with O'Neil's and Klink's contentions, it suffices here to assume that the statements were so libelous. However, it may be noted that as the communication was sent by Clara Lehman to only Nicholas Klink, who was the superintendent of the county farm at which the misappropriations are charged to have occurred, it may have been privileged to such an extent that the publication thereof to Nicholas Klink only may not have rendered her liable in a civil action for libel.Werner v. Ascher, 86 Wis. 349, 351, 56 N.W. 869; Wilsonv. Noonan, 35 Wis. 321, 349. Upon receiving the letter, Nicholas Klink gave it to the defendant Eugene Klink, who showed it to O'Neil, and arranged with the latter's consent to employ private detectives to discover the author of the letter. The detectives traced it to Clara Lehman, and obtained from her a written confession admitting that she sent that letter. Thereupon Eugene Klink, with O'Neil's consent, consulted Eugene Clifford, an attorney at law, in regard to the matter, and left the letter and the confession with him. Clifford had a conference in relation thereto with Clara Lehman at his office, and then arranged for another conference there on April 22, 1938, at which O'Neil and his wife, and Klink and his wife were also present. Two days before that meeting Klink examined records at the courthouse to find out about the assets belonging to Clara Lehman and her husband. At the conference on April 22, 1938, Clara Lehman was induced to say that she would personally raise and pay $700 or $800 *Page 396 to defray expenses which Klink claimed he had incurred in the investigation of the matter. Her husband was not asked to attend that conference because she did not want him to know about the letter. Thereafter four conferences were held at Clifford's office between all of the above-mentioned persons, including Henry Lehman. In the course of these conferences the amounts requested of Clara Lehman were increased from $700 or $800 to $1,200 and finally to $1,400 at the third conference. The latter amount was paid at the next conference by a check issued by Henry Lehman and mutual releases of all claims against each other were then signed and delivered by and between Clara Lehman on her part, and Klink and his wife on their part, and by Clara Lehman on her part and O'Neil and his wife on their part. The release given by the O'Neils provided for the payment of $200 to O'Neil, and the amount paid for the release given by the Klinks was $1,200 to Klink. of this amount Klink paid to Clifford $150 as attorney's fees, and the reasonableness thereof has not been questioned.

The principal controversies in relation to the evidence are whether there is sufficient credible evidence to establish beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendants maliciously threatened to accuse Clara Lehman of criminal libel with the intent to extort money; whether O'Neil had personally demanded the payment of money by Clara Lehman; and whether Klink and O'Neil, acting together with their respective wives, had, by maliciously threatening to so accuse Clara Lehman, put her in fear of being prosecuted or whether she thought of that by herself. She and also her husband testified repeatedly and at considerable length, but with some conflicts in their testimony, that in the course of the conferences Klink and his wife, and also O'Neil and his wife, had called her a criminal, threatened her with a warrant for criminal libel, said that she could be sent to Taycheedah, and demanded the payment of "money and plenty of it." She testified that when she offered, at the first conference, to pay Klink's expenses for investigating who *Page 397 wrote the letter, he refused her offer, and when she said that she supposed she would have to disgrace her family and go to Taycheedah, the others replied that was not the question; that they wanted money and plenty of it; that O'Neil and his wife and Klink all told her that they did not want to send her to Taycheedah, that they wanted money; that O'Neil came up and put his fist in her face and said, "We got you just where we want you now, you are nothing but a criminal and we are going to hold you for that;" that Mrs. O'Neil said that she (Mrs. Lehman) would go to. Taycheedah where she belonged; and that they now had her for a criminal and would take out a criminal warrant against her and it would cost her husband plenty.

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Bluebook (online)
296 N.W. 96, 237 Wis. 391, 135 A.L.R. 719, 1941 Wisc. LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oneil-v-state-wis-1941.